释义 |
Definition of readership in English: readershipnoun ˈriːdəʃɪpˈridərˌʃɪp 1treated as singular or plural The readers of a newspaper, magazine, or book regarded collectively. 总称(报纸、杂志或书本的)读者群 the magazine has a readership of just 65,000 Example sentencesExamples - Their emphasis is on practice not theory, and the intended readership is made very clear.
- Thus, for an adoring readership did Laurie Lee foster the myth we demanded.
- Mainstream newspaper publishers have been wresting with falling readerships and generational market shifts for at least a decade, with little apparent success.
- Newspaper readership information is collated by the National Readership Survey.
- The circulation rates and readerships of newspapers greatly exceed those of medical journals.
- Consequently the bias of one reporter reaches a global readership of millions.
- This is not just a result of the preferences of a mass readership, who happily pick up stories but seldom read poems.
- A newspaper with an elderly readership can see its circulation dying off with its readers.
- The fact that there is so little at stake in terms of financial rewards, book royalties and readerships means that innovative writers can afford a little self-indulgence.
- Much of this has to do with the growth of rural readership and circulation in Hindi newspapers.
- In addition, print-on-demand books can be a convenient way to distribute books that have low readerships, or to create custom readings for university students.
- You compare the readership of ‘The New York Times’ to the readerships of the other newspapers, and it compares very well…
- The magazine claims a readership of 20,000, which means it probably sells about half that.
- These technologies also allow a wide readership of certain precious manuscripts.
- It plainly addresses different readerships, either within the one nation or outside it.
- This is the day it is announced in the House of Commons by the Prime Minister, and certainly a number of newspapers, with mass readerships throughout the country, have misunderstood it.
- It is a pleasure to edit a magazine with such an intelligent and engaged readership.
- As readership grows, so does the competition, but pioneers are not used to worrying.
- It denies the existence of different genres, different generations, different audiences and readerships.
- There is absolutely no transparency in measuring the readerships of newspapers or magazines for that matter.
2ReadershipBritish The position of Reader at a university. 〈英〉(大学的)高级讲师职务 friends invited him to apply for the Readership Example sentencesExamples - He returned to Bristol in 1946 when offered a Readership there.
- Research output of high quantity and quality would almost certainly be rewarded in terms of academic prestige and through promotion, to a Readership or Chair, say, which may or may not have brought financial benefits.
- As part of their strategy to build up the mathematics department, they appointed an algebraist to a Readership, and two other staff to Lecturerships.
- Moreover, Bonsall had been promoted to a Readership in the meantime, and Goldie thought that it would be better to return to pure algebra, where he stood a better chance of doing more independent work.
- As a Reader, he was not obliged to assume executive or even teaching roles - the Readership being conceived, in the British tradition, as essentially a research position.
- In the Church Donne held several livings and the divinity readership at Lincoln's Inn.
- Two years later, in 1967, Sargent retired from her Readership and, unlike many mathematicians, seems to have given up research at this time.
- A Readership in Statistics was created in the Faculty of Agriculture to teach courses in that Faculty and courses in Mathematics.
- By the time she published her next book, she had a Readership; a chair followed a few years later.
Definition of readership in US English: readershipnounˈrēdərˌSHipˈridərˌʃɪp 1treated as singular or plural The readers of a newspaper, magazine, or book regarded collectively. 总称(报纸、杂志或书本的)读者群 it has a readership of 100 million 它拥有一亿读者。 Example sentencesExamples - It plainly addresses different readerships, either within the one nation or outside it.
- In addition, print-on-demand books can be a convenient way to distribute books that have low readerships, or to create custom readings for university students.
- Much of this has to do with the growth of rural readership and circulation in Hindi newspapers.
- It denies the existence of different genres, different generations, different audiences and readerships.
- The magazine claims a readership of 20,000, which means it probably sells about half that.
- Their emphasis is on practice not theory, and the intended readership is made very clear.
- The circulation rates and readerships of newspapers greatly exceed those of medical journals.
- The fact that there is so little at stake in terms of financial rewards, book royalties and readerships means that innovative writers can afford a little self-indulgence.
- It is a pleasure to edit a magazine with such an intelligent and engaged readership.
- This is not just a result of the preferences of a mass readership, who happily pick up stories but seldom read poems.
- Newspaper readership information is collated by the National Readership Survey.
- Thus, for an adoring readership did Laurie Lee foster the myth we demanded.
- A newspaper with an elderly readership can see its circulation dying off with its readers.
- This is the day it is announced in the House of Commons by the Prime Minister, and certainly a number of newspapers, with mass readerships throughout the country, have misunderstood it.
- Consequently the bias of one reporter reaches a global readership of millions.
- Mainstream newspaper publishers have been wresting with falling readerships and generational market shifts for at least a decade, with little apparent success.
- As readership grows, so does the competition, but pioneers are not used to worrying.
- These technologies also allow a wide readership of certain precious manuscripts.
- You compare the readership of ‘The New York Times’ to the readerships of the other newspapers, and it compares very well…
- There is absolutely no transparency in measuring the readerships of newspapers or magazines for that matter.
2usually ReadershipBritish The position of Reader at a university. 〈英〉(大学的)高级讲师职务 Example sentencesExamples - In the Church Donne held several livings and the divinity readership at Lincoln's Inn.
- Two years later, in 1967, Sargent retired from her Readership and, unlike many mathematicians, seems to have given up research at this time.
- As a Reader, he was not obliged to assume executive or even teaching roles - the Readership being conceived, in the British tradition, as essentially a research position.
- As part of their strategy to build up the mathematics department, they appointed an algebraist to a Readership, and two other staff to Lecturerships.
- A Readership in Statistics was created in the Faculty of Agriculture to teach courses in that Faculty and courses in Mathematics.
- By the time she published her next book, she had a Readership; a chair followed a few years later.
- Research output of high quantity and quality would almost certainly be rewarded in terms of academic prestige and through promotion, to a Readership or Chair, say, which may or may not have brought financial benefits.
- Moreover, Bonsall had been promoted to a Readership in the meantime, and Goldie thought that it would be better to return to pure algebra, where he stood a better chance of doing more independent work.
- He returned to Bristol in 1946 when offered a Readership there.
|